Author's personal copy Molecular Phylogenetics and Evolution 59 (2011) 263–270 Contents lists available at ScienceDirect Molecular Phylogenetics and Evolution journal homepage: www.elsevier.com/locate/ympev Phylogeny of the genus Turris: Correlating molecular data with radular anatomy and shell morphology ⇑ Alexander Fedosov a,b,1, Maren Watkins a,1, Francisco M. Heralde III c, Patrice Showers Corneli a, , Gisela P. Concepcion b, Baldomero M. Olivera a a Department of Biology, University of Utah, Salt Lake City, UT, USA b Marine Science Institute, University of the Philippines, Diliman, Quezon City, Philippines c Department of Biochemistry and Molecular Biology, College of Medicine, University of the Philippines, Manila, Philippines article info abstract Article history: There are over 10,000 species of venomous marine molluscs, the vast majority of these, which are gen- Received 8 March 2010 erally referred to as ‘‘turrids’’, are traditionally assigned to a single family, Turridae (Powell 1966). Here, Revised 29 December 2010 we provide an initial molecular analysis of the type genus of the family, Turris Röding, 1798, thought to be Accepted 30 January 2011 among the most well characterized groups in the family. We show that the type genus is not monophy- Available online 23 February 2011 letic. We analyzed specimens conventionally assigned to 9 different Turris species using molecular markers, Keywords: combined with the shell morphology and radular anatomy whenever feasible. The results suggest that Turris species assigned to the genus Turris, provisionally assigned to two different subgenera are not monophy- Gemmula Lophiotoma letic. Five previously described species belong to the subgenus Turris (s.s.) Röding 1798: Turris babylonia, Radulae (Linne, 1758), Turris grandis, (J. E. Gray, 1834), Turris dollyae, (Olivera, 1999), Turris normandavidsoni Molecular phylogeny (Olivera, 1999) and Turris spectabilis (Reeve, 1843). With a change in species designation, Turris assyria Shell morphology (formerly T. babylonia1010) is added to a well-defined clade, which is in turn more closely related to Morphospecies Lophiotoma and Gemmula species than to the other five Turris species. We show that these five species conventionally assigned to Turris do not belong in the same subgenus, and form a clade provisionally designated as Annulaturris Powell, 1966: Turris annulata, (Reeve, 1843), Turris undosa, (Lamarck, 1816), Turris cristata, (Vera-Peláez, Vega-Luz, and Lozano-Francisco 2000) Turris cryptorrhaphe (G. B. Sowerby, 1825) and Turris nadaensis (Azuma, 1973). Implications of the molecular phylogenetic results and its correlation with radular morphology are discussed. Ó 2011 Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved. 1. Introduction Recent fieldwork in the tropical Pacific (Bouchet et al., 2002) has led to an estimate of over 10,000 recent species of ‘‘turrids’’. Traditionally comprising three major families: the Conidae The last comprehensive treatment of the genus Turris was that (‘‘cone snails’’), the Terebridae (‘‘auger snails’’), and the Turridae of Powell (1966); eight species were defined, with one, Turris s.l.(Powell, 1966; McLean, 1971; Ponder, 1973; Ponder and Waren, crispa, divided into 4 subspecies. Subsequently, Powell (1966) 1988), the superfamily Conoidea is an extremely biodiverse group recognized that two of these species, Turris annulata and Turris of venomous marine snails. Venoms of conoideans are a complex amicta , diverged significantly from the six, and for these he desig- mixture, with more than a hundred individual peptide compo- nated a subgenus, Annulaturris. This treatise on turrids summa- nents, comprising a largely untapped pharmacological resource rized the nine subfamilies and more than 500 genera proposed to (Olivera et al., 1990; Olivera, 1999). belong to the family Turridae. A later in-depth study of foregut Members of the Turridae include the first conoideans that ap- anatomy and radular morphology in a number of conoideans (Taylor pear abundantly at the Eocene/Oligocene boundary about 34 mil- et al., 1993) led to a proposal for the complete revision of tradi- lion years ago (Tucker, 2004). The extant species traditionally tional taxonomy of Conoidea. Taylor and co-workers demonstrated assigned to Turridae encompass a huge morphological diversity. that some of the subfamilies previously included in the Turridae were more closely allied to Conus and they assigned these taxa to the family Conidaem demanding a narrower definition of Turridae. ⇑ Corresponding author. Fax: +1 801 581 4868. The first molecular phylogenetic investigation of Conoidea E-mail address: [email protected] (P.S. Corneli). 1 These authors contributed equally to this work. suggested an even more complex situation. Several subfamilies of 1055-7903/$ - see front matter Ó 2011 Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved. doi:10.1016/j.ympev.2011.01.019 Author's personal copy 264 A. Fedosov et al. / Molecular Phylogenetics and Evolution 59 (2011) 263–270 Turridae (e.g. Crassispirinae and Cochlespirinae), were found to be denaturation (95 °C, 60 s); followed by 40 cycles of denaturation polyphyletic or paraphyletic groups (Puillandre et al., 2008) sug- (95 °C, 20 s); annealing (55 °C, 20 s) and extension (72 °C, 30 s). gesting that continuous reassessment of Conoidean taxonomy will The resulting PCR products were purified by gel electrophoresis, be required as newer data are acquired. Recently, it was proposed recovered from agarose using High Pure PCR Product Purification (Tucker and Tenorio, 2009) that the species conventionally in Kit (Roche Diagnostics, Indianapolis, IN). A number of recent stud- Turridae be placed in two separate superfamilies, some to a newly ies (e.g. Buhay, 2009) show that active mitochondrial genes, encod- proposed superfamily, Turroidea, (with the terebrids), with other ing cytochrome c oxidase subunit 1 often incorporate into the lineages remaining in the superfamily Conoidea (with the cone nuclear genome where they become inactive and start to accumu- snails). late multiple substitutions. Thus typical PCR product may contain a Genus Turris Roding, 1798, the type genus of the family Turridae mixture of molecules of different sequences clearly decreasing the consists of approximately 20 recent and 20 extinct species. quality of the sequences. The preferred method of obtaining reli- (Tucker, 2004). The genus Turris defines the subfamily Turrinae able sequence is to clone PCR products and sequence multiple (type species, Turris babylonia), the only subfamily of Turridae for clones in order to determine the mitochondrial consensus se- which monophyly has not been rejected. Previously published quence. Consequently, the eluted DNA fragments were annealed studies on the molecular phylogeny of Turrinae include the analy- to pNEB206A vector using the USER Friendly Cloning kit (New sis of species in Unedogemmula/Lophiotoma (Heralde et al., 2007), England BioLabs, Inc., Beverly, MA) following manufacturer’s and Xenuroturris (Kantor et al., 2008). Although a number of new suggested protocol and the resulting products transformed into species have been described in the genus Turris in the last decade DH5a competent cells. The nucleic acid sequences of these 12S, (Olivera et al., 1999; Vera-Peláez, Vega-Luz, and Lozano-Francisco, 16S and COI-encoding clones were determined according to the 2000; Bozzetti, 2006) neither an in-depth evaluation of the genus standard protocol for automated sequencing. nor an examination of phylogeny using any criteria except shell The voucher specimens used in this analysis will be deposited at morphology has been carried out. Here our goal is to provide a the Philippine Biodiversity Resources Center, Marine Science Insti- framework for understanding intrageneric relationships within tute, University of the Philippines, Quezon City, Philippines. Turris by as we correlate shell and radular morphology with molec- ular data. 2.4. Phylogenetic analysis 2. Materials and method Individual 12SrRNA, 16SrRNA and COI equences were aligned with Clustal and then refined by eye using the graphical interface 2.1. Specimens of MacClade4.08 (Maddison and Maddison, 2005) to correct obvi- ously homologous regions that Clustal failed to recognize. These Material for present study was collected at different localities include cases which required a simple shift in the position of a within Philippines with most specimens from either the Danajon gap to avoid a stop codon not present in other sequences or to Bank near Olango Island, or from Sogod, Cebu Island, both in Cebu complete a codon whose members flanked the Clustal inferred province in the central Visayas. The specimens analyzed are sum- gap. We refined the rRNAs alignments with Rcoffee (Notredame marized in Table 1. We include Turridrupa, Lophiotoma and Gemmula et al., 2000) to account for secondary structure. Because Rcoffee species to determine how each of the Turris species fit into the sub- runs are restricted to 50 taxa and 1000 base pairs, the Clustal align- family Turrinae: we do not assume monophyly of the genus Turris. ments were divided into smaller subsets, aligned with Rcoffee and Most specimens were collected by hookah at depths between 10 then concatenated for further analysis. Alignments within Rcoffee and 30 m, and by gill nets at depths of 70–150 m. The specimens are guided by secondary structure characteristics (Notredame were kept alive, and dissected within 1–2 days. Shells were photo- et al., 2000). The color-coded CORE indices were used to identify graphed,
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